After the ISLAMIST attacks in Paris, Brussels, and Nice, the mass rapes in Cologne and the hordes of ISLAMIC refugees streaming into the Balkans and Germany Donald Trump was very specific.

He called for a, "total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on."

Your only rebuttal is this bullshit propaganda. Trump never called for removing legal Muslim immigrants or citizens, nor did he propose going back into a time machine to prevent the gold star Muslim parents from immigrating to the U.S.

The first ran in Politico on April 22, 2011, under the headline, “Birtherism: Where it all began.” Politico, April 22, 2011: The answer lies in Democratic, not Republican politics, and in the bitter, exhausting spring of 2008. At the time, the Democratic presidential primary was slipping away from Hillary Clinton and some of her most passionate supporters grasped for something, anything that would deal a final reversal to Barack Obama.

According to the article, the theory that Obama was born in Kenya “first emerged in the spring of 2008, as Clinton supporters circulated an anonymous email questioning Obama’s citizenship.”

The second article, which ran several days after the Politico piece, was published by the Telegraph, a British paper, which stated: “An anonymous email circulated by supporters of Mrs Clinton, Mr Obama’s main rival for the party’s nomination, thrust a new allegation into the national spotlight — that he had not been born in Hawaii.”

Both of those stories comport with what we here at FactCheck.org wrote two-and-a-half years earlier, on Nov. 8, 2008: “This claim was first advanced by diehard Hillary Clinton supporters as her campaign for the party’s nomination faded, and has enjoyed a revival among John McCain’s partisans as he fell substantially behind Obama in public opinion polls.”

Claims about Obama’s birthplace appeared in chain emails bouncing around the Web, and one of the first lawsuits over Obama’s birth certificate was filed by Philip Berg, a former deputy Pennsylvania attorney general and a self-described “moderate to liberal” who supported Clinton.